Awake 1973 banned Witnesses playing Chess..why?

by Witness 007 26 Replies latest watchtower bible

  • Separation of Powers
    Separation of Powers

    The "Chess" position of the Society is a clear example of changes things on a whim. It depends on who is running the show. It's OK....It's NOT OK.

    It goes back to that question about the 10 commandments...did God make them up? or did God discover them?

    If he made them up...then they can change at his discretion (and of course, they did).

    If he discovered them...then he is not omniscient (all-knowing)

    The Society plays both....they make up rules and then, on a whim, change them.

    They "discover" truth, but their truth keeps changing.

  • RubaDub
    RubaDub

    There was never an official ban. Just one of the articles at the time about how it could be detrimental to some because of the competition and "warfare" on the board.

    There was a similar article about golf at the same time. If I recall correctly, a brother was becoming a professional golfer and quit the sport because of the competitive nature.

    I remember the discussion came up at the KH after a meeting one day about the competition. I told a brother (elder) who was talking about competition about if he had ever applied for a job. He said yes. I asked if other people were also applying for it? He said yes. Then I said "didn't you want to win and have the others fail?"

    He mumbled a few words and the conversation changed.

    Rub a Dub

  • Finkelstein
    Finkelstein

    Looking at the game of Chess from a rational and logical perception, if playing the game has shown to cause

    undue bouts of violence between the two players and this has been seen and documented then the WTS.

    position would have some viability. The WTS leaders are always trying to proselytize themselves as spiritual guiding leaders,

    within this endeavor they come up with many irrational and unrealistic ideas.

    .

    To be a spiritual seer or not to be, that is the question .

  • Heaven
    Heaven

    Chess is a table top wargame. The goal is to overthrow your opponent's ruler(s).

  • skeeter1
    skeeter1

    My pure guess. I figured that high ranking Bethel people were playing chess. Something went wrong and feelings were hurt. So, Bethel just banned it.

  • Vanderhoven7
    Vanderhoven7

    *** Awake! 1973 March 22 pp.13-14 Chess-What Kind of Game Is It? ***

    Highly Competitive Game

    However, pitting one mind against another, with the element of chance eliminated entirely, tends to stir up a competitive spirit in chess players. In fact, chess is frequently characterized as an 'intellectualized fight.' For example, dethroned world chess champion Boris Spassky noted: "By nature I do not have a combative urge. . . . But in chess you have to be a fighter, and of necessity I became one."

    This helps to explain why there are no topflight women chess players-the more than eighty chess grand masters in the world are all men. Actress Sylvia Miles observed regarding this: "To be a professional chess player, you have to be a killer. If the spirit of competition in American women ever does become that strong, then I think we'll get some major female players."

    The spirit of competition in chess may be stirred to fever pitch, which is reflected in chess players' attitudes and language. "There's no comparison in any other sport in the attempt to destroy your opponent's psyche," explains chess player Stuart Marguiles. "I never have heard anybody say that he beat his opponent. It's always that he smashed, squished, murdered or killed him."

    True, players with which one may be acquainted may not use such language. But, nevertheless, the spirit of competition between players can lead to unpleasant consequences, as the New York Timeslast summer reported: "Most families manage to keep the inevitable conflicts that arise in games to the chessboard. But in some homes, tensions linger long past checkmate."

    Of course, chess is not, in this respect, much different from other competitive games.Participants who desire to please God, regardless of the game they are playing, need to be careful that they do not violate the Bible principle: "Let us not become egotistical, stirring up competition with one another, envying one another."-Gal. 5:26.

    However, there is something else regarding chess that deserves consideration.

    Relation to War

    This is the game's military connotations, which are obvious. The opposing forces are called "the enemy." These are "attacked" and "captured"; the purpose being to make the opposing king "surrender." Thus Horowitz and Rothenberg say in their book The Complete Book of Chess under the subheading "Chess Is War": "The functions assigned to [the chess pieces], the terms used in describing these functions, the ultimate aim, the justified brutality in gaining the objective all-add up to war, no less."

    It is generally accepted that chess can be traced to a game played in India around 600 C.E. calledchaturanga, or the army game. The four elements of the Indian army-chariots, elephants, cavalry and infantry-were represented by the pieces that developed through the centuries into rooks, bishops, knights and pawns. Thus the New YorkTimes, August 31, 1972, observed:

    "Chess has been a game of war ever since it was originated 1,400 years ago. The chessboard has been an arena for battles between royal courts, between armies, between all sorts of conflicting ideologies. The most familiar opposition has been the one created in the Middle Age with one set of king, queen, knights, bishops, rooks and pawns against another.

    "Other conflicts depicted have been between Christians against barbarians, Americans against British, cowboys against Indians and capitalists against Communists. . . . It is reported that one American designer is now creating a set illustrating the war in Vietnam."

    Probably most modern chess players do not think of themselves as maneuvering an army in battle. Yet are not the game's connections with war obvious? The word for pawn is derived from a Medieval Latin word meaning "foot soldier." A knight was a mounted man-at-arms of the European feudal period. Bishops took an active part in supporting their side's military efforts. And rooks, or castles, places of protection, were important in medieval warfare.

    Thus Reuben Fine, a chess player of international stature, wrote in his book The Psychology of the Chess Player: "Quite obviously, chess is a play-substitute for the art of war." And Time magazine reported: "Chess originated as a war game. It is an adult, intellectualized equivalent of the maneuvers enacted by little boys with toy soldiers."

    While some chess players may object to making such a comparison, others will readily acknowledge the similarity. In fact, in an article about one expert chess player, the New York Times noted: "When Mr. Lyman looks at a chessboard, its squared outlines dissolve at times into the hills and valleys and secret paths of a woodland chase, or the scarred ground of an English battlefield."

    When one considers the complex movements, as opposing chessboard armies vie with each other for position, one may wonder whether chess has been a factor in the development of military strategy. According to V. R. Ramachandra Dikshitar, it has. In his book War in Ancient Indiahe examined this matter at length, and concluded: "The principles of chess supplied ideas to the progressive development of the modes and constituents of the army."

    The Need for Caution

    Some chess players have recognized the harm that can result from playing the game. According to The Encyclopaedia Britannica, the religious reformer "John Huss, . . . when in prison, deplored his having played at chess, whereby he had lost time and run the risk of being subject to violent passions."

    The extreme fascination of chess can result in its consuming large amounts of one's time and attention to the exclusion of more important matters, apparently a reason Huss regretted having played the game. Also, in playing it there is the danger of "stirring up competition with one another," even developing hostility toward another, something the Bible warns Christians to avoid doing.

    Then, too, grown-ups may not consider it proper for children to play with war toys, or at games of a military nature. Is it consistent, then, that they play a game noted to be, in the opinion of some, an "intellectualized equivalent of the maneuvers enacted by little boys with toy soldiers"? What effect does playing chess really have upon one? Is it a wholesome effect?

    Surely chess is a fascinating game. But there are questions regarding it that are good for each one who plays chess to consider.

  • Finkelstein
    Finkelstein

    Perhaps if the GB leaders studied up on human sociological behavior they wouldn't come up with such idiotic statements.

    .

    A Game is contained within imaginary thought processes, where real competition that turns to violence or stirs up

    violence is something quite different.

    There are many games that are designed with a strategy to weaken the opponents your playing against.

    Checkers is a game of capturing the other players pieces, is that not an example of warring competition. ?

  • DJS
    DJS

    Rules, Near Rules, Rules Lite, Semi-Rules, Almost Rules, Quasi-Rules, Walk-Talk-and-Act Like Rules. Aren't we all glad to be rid of this draconian control. Chess, like so many other things such as how I make love to my wife, how much education I achieve or allow my children to achieve, whether I play sports or allow my children to play sports, what kinds of music I listen to or allow my children to listen to, ad infinitum - fall into the same category:

    None of their fukkking business. The mind numbing control is what caused me to begin despising the Dark Lords in the Dark Tower. I've been thankful for each day of the past 20 years out of the Borg that I no longer have to consider what these evil men say, think or write.

  • keyser soze
    keyser soze

    I think it has to do with the Phallic imagery. Almost every piece is shaped like a penis.

  • Bungi Bill
    Bungi Bill

    The timing of that particular Awake article is no coincidence. For a lengthy period during the previous year, 1972, there had been a (very) well publicised series of chess games between the American Bobby Fischer and the Russian Boris Spasky.

    During this time, chess sets sold like never before - and probably like never since, as well. In fact, the expression"Chess Craze" would not be too strong a term to use to describe the hysteria that caught on over this series of chess games.

    The media certainly hyped it up, and until the final saga of the Vietnam war (at least its allied intervention, anyway) displaced it later in that year, it seemed as if this chess match was all the media could talk about.

    This sudden, new found enthusiasm for chess did catch on in the JW congregations, as well - which almost certainly prompted that Awake article. (After all, old Kill Joy would have to have something to say about anything that might actually entertain people!)

    Bill

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